Like every other website on the planet, SmallNetBuilder uses cookies. Our cookies track login status, but we only allow admins to log in anyway, so those don't apply to you. Any other cookies you pick up during your visit come from advertisers, which we don't control. If you continue to use the site, you agree to tolerate our use of cookies. Thank you!

In this review, I'm going to take a look at the IOGEAR
GCN1000 PCPortal—a device designed to leverage the power of networking
to enable access to a workstation or server PC from anywhere in the world. The
PCPortal is a network-enabled IP KVM device, which provides keyboard, mouse, and
monitor connection to a remote network-connected computer.

Certainly, there are software solutions that allow for
remote access to a workstation or server PC, such as GotoMyPC,
pcAnywhere,
or Windows Remote Desktop Connection, which is included with Windows XP Pro and
Vista Business. For Linux, VNC and SSH are common means of remotely accessing a
system over a network. The value added by the GCN1000 includes operating
system, file and application-level access, as well as BIOS level access over a
network connection from anywhere in the world.

There are other network enabled KVMs, also referred to as IP
KVMs, such as the Lantronix Spider (reviewed).
Both devices allow for full remote control of a computer, albeit with different
target markets. The Lantronix is targeted more at the server market, while the
IOGEAR seems positioned more toward desktop/workstation PCs, although both can
be used for either.

I've used IOGEAR's PCPortal for the past few weeks
while on a couple of business trips, and I have had the opportunity to test it
from various remote locations. I installed the PCPortal in my home network and
connected it to an XP Pro desktop PC, which I'll refer to as my "target"
computer/PC throughout this review.

Installation

The GCN1000 PCPortal is a simple device, measuring nearly 7"
wide by 3.25" deep and 1.2" high. Physically, its construction feels solid and
looks to be well made, with the device weighing nearly 3 pounds. Overall, it is
a pretty clean looking metal structure giving a sense of quality, with status
LEDs as well as a network port on the front of the device shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1: Front view of GCN1000 with diagram

Installing the device is a matter of plugging it in to power
and your network, as well as to your target computer. There are three computer
connection cables included with the GCN, in addition to an external power brick
and network cable. All three cables connect to the back of the device,
displayed in Figure 2.